Kano Chronicle Profile picture
May 23 17 tweets 3 min read Read on X
The history of the dethronement/disposition of Sarkis (Emirs) in Kano.

Adapted from a write-up by Adnan Bawa Bello.

1. The 1st ever Sarki recorded to have been deposed/dethroned in Kano was Guguwa Dan Gijimasu (1247-1290). Image
2. The 2nd Sarki reported to have been deposed/dethroned was Dakauta Dan Abdullahi Baja in 1452. He was said to have ruled in Kano for just 1 day.
3. Sarki Atuma Dan Dakauta who succeeded his father, was the 3rd on the list of deposed/dethroned Sarkis in Kano. Dakauta ruled Kano for only 7days in the year 1452.
4. Sarki Yakubu Dan Kisoke was dethroned in 1565 after ruling kano for 4 months and 29 days . He was reinstated but decline the offer and lived in a place which was later called Yakufawa.

Two of his sons Shashiri and Dauda Abasama became Sarkis of Kano in later years.
5. Dauda Abasama shared the same experience with his father in 1565 as he was removed after ruling kano for only 50 days . He lived in a village called Kwarmashe after he was deposed.
6. The pious Sarki Abubarkar Kado Dan Rumfa (1565-1573) was dethroned after he ruled kano for 8.5 years
7. Sarki Alhaji Dan Kutumbi (1648-1649) was deposed and settled at Dan-Zaki village in Gezawa.
8. Sarki Kukuna Dan Alhaji (1651-1652) ruled for 1 year and was deposed. He was reinstated after 3 months and there after ruled Kano for another 8 years and 7 month.
9. Sarki Soyaki Dan Shekarau ruled for only 3 months and was sacked in 1652 and there after lived in Dakurawa.
10. After the dethronement in 1652, there was a relief of removal of Sarkis in Kano for 250 years until 1903 when Sarkin Kano Alu (1893-1903) was deposed by the British, taken to Yola and later Lokoja where he died in the 1920s.
11. The Ag Sarki of Kano Waziri Allah bar Sarki was removed in 1909 by Mr. Temple, the British residential officer in Kano.
12. In 1963 Sarkin Kano Sanusi I (1953-1963) was deposed after he was indicted for financial misappropriation by the Muffet Committee of Enquiry. He was taken to Azare and later relocated to wudil where the died in 1991.
13. Sarkin Kano Muhammadu Sanusi II was deposed by Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje on 9th March 2020 and taken to Loko in Nasarawa state.
14. The Kano state house of assembly has passed Kano emirates council law (repeal bill) 2024.

-The law has abrogated establishment of 5 new Emirates in the state.

-All offices established under the repealed law have been set aside.
15. Would Sanusi II be reinstated and decline the offer as done by Sarki Yakubu Dan Kisoke from the Bagauda ruling house?

Would he be reinstated and commence a second tenure like Sarki Kukuna Dan Alhaji also from the Bagauda lineage?
16. Or would he never test such power again like his grandfather Sarki Sanusi I ?

Only time would provide answers to these questions.
17. Sources:
⁃Kano Chronicle
⁃Kano Daga Dutsen Dala of Dr. Uba Adamu
⁃Tsarin Mussulunci a kasar Hausa of Jamilu Fagge
⁃Confidential Report of Muffet Committee of Enquiry and so on.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Kano Chronicle

Kano Chronicle Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @KanoChronicle

May 14
Your guess is right, Kano came up the most.

“ ON KANO

How many of those whose knowledge of geography is by no means below the average would nevertheless find a difficulty in giving an immediate answer if asked to say in which of the five continents the city of Kano was situated! And yet London is probably not more generally known throughout the continent of Europe than is Kano throughout an equal area in the Central Soudan.

It would be difficult to find an inhabitant
of even an obscure village, within several hundred miles of Kano, who could not tell you something of this great commercial capital of Hausaland, and who, if he had not been there himself, had not at least conversed with traders who had come from it…Image
… The market of Kano is the most important in the whole of tropical Africa, and its manufactures are to be met with from the Gulf of Guines on the south to the Mediterranean on the north, and from the Atlantic on the west to the Nile, or even the Red Sea, on the east.
The stranger, who in conversation with a native expresses an interest in any town or place at which he may be staying in the Central Soudan, is constantly liable to be interrupted by the remark, "You have not yet seen Kano." Just as in London we might hope to come across any English friend whom we had for years lost sight of and whose whereabouts were unknown, so to Kano one would naturally go in order to find any native of the Central Soudan of whose movements all definite trace had been lost….
.. It is the great meeting-point, not only for Hausas but for other races far and near.
Monteuil gives it as his opinion that no less than two million people pass through the city in the course of each year. The Tuarek of the desert comes in touch here with the natives of Adamawa and the south; the Arab merchant meets here with traders from Lake chad, on the one side, and the Niger or even the Atlantic sea-board, on the other. Here, too, are to be found Muslim pilgrims from far and near on their way to or from Mecca…
The importance of the town is due, first, to the native industries which it contains; and secondly, to the trade which is centred here largely in consequence of the existence of these industries. They consist chiefly of the weaving of cloth from native-grown cotton, and in the making and dyeing of various articles of clothing therefrom. It would be well within the mark to say that Kano clothes more than half the population of the Central Soudan, and any European traveller who will take the trouble to ask for it, will find no difficulty in purchasing Kano-made cloth at towns on the coast as widely separated from one another as Alexandria, Tripoli, Tunis or Lagos. The cloth is woven on narrow looms, the separate strips being never more than four inches in width. These are sewn together so neatly that no join could be detected except by very careful investigation.”

Charles Henry Robinson, Hausaland or Fifteen Hundred Miles through the Central Sudan (1896) pp.111-112
Read 7 tweets
Apr 12
Kano itself was later named after the great ancestor of the Abagayawa (a smither), Dala (named after the great hunter and the grandfather of Barbushe). Wards or settlements established during the period of Maguzawa were merely restricted to the Dala area and its vicinity such as Jakara, Gwauron Dutse, Kukar Tube, Darmanawa and Madatai apart from the already mentioned rocky areas.

Wards established, probably during the early period of the Bagaudawa dynasty include Kutumbawa, Rimin Kira, Adakawa, Mazugal, Karofin Gangamau, Garke, Tuma, Kabuwaya, Karofin Kangiwa, Shatsari, Aikawa, Makwalla, Gangamau and Gwangwazo.Image
The Jukunawa (Kwararrafa people) founded the wards of Yakasai, Sagagi and Kofar Mata in the 7th century while the Katsinawa in the 18th and 19th centuries founded the wards of Kulkul (named after their leader Abdullahi Qul-Qul), Warure and Darmà.

Wards which were named after a famous person included Durumin Aje, Sharfadi, Durumin Iya, Durumin Zungura, Kabara (formerly Jarkasa), Tudun Wada, Malladan, Malam Ganari, Satatima. Juma, Shetima and Dandago. This also indicates the ethnic origins of their inhabitants.
Wards named after a landmark or the topography of the area are Bakin Ruwa, Mararraba, Mai Aduwa, Rijiya Biyu, Rijiya Hudu, Cediyar Fero, Kwarin Mabuga, Kurna, Makwarari, Cediyar Kuda, Kan Tudu, Sarari, Marmara, Zage, Yar Kasuwa, Magoga, Diso, Dausayi (now Gyaranya, Jarkasa (now Kabara) and Yalwa. Wards named after a tribal group include Hausawa, Madigawa, Garangamawa, Ciromawa, Aikawa, Daurawa, Kabawa and Sanka.
Read 6 tweets
Feb 2
“Meet Professor Galadanci, the first woman consultant, gynaecologist, and Professor of Medicine in the Kano region of Nigeria. She has dedicated her life to reducing maternal and child mortality rates, worked to combat gender disparities in health, and has played a pivotal role in shaping policies relating to critical maternal health challenges worldwide.”Image
“She has authored hundreds of publications and has trained and mentored thousands of health students, enabling them to take on leadership roles across Nigeria and the African region.”
- International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics.
Currently, she serves as the director of Bayero University’s Africa Centre of Excellence in Population, Health and Policy (ACEPHAP) @AcephapBuk
Read 4 tweets
Dec 3, 2023
In keeping with the influence of Kano as a learning center, the Khalifa Isyaku Rabiu University; one of the few Qur’anic Universities in the world is commencing academic activities, and in that way solidifying the foundation laid by the Madabo University founded in 1350 in Kano.
Image
Image
In 1350, the 1st & 2nd wave of Wangara clerics who founded Madabo University in Kano named faculties after their Sheikhs thus, we have neighborhoods in present-day Kano named Kabara from Sheikh Kabara, Mandawari from Mandaghri, Sheshe from Shayshe & Zaitawa from Sheikh Zait.
This way, Kano evolved as a learning center that retained to this day, a huge network of Tsangaya (Qur’ānic schooling networks) and Islamiyya (modern Islamic education) schools, on a larger scale than any Emirate in Northern Nigeria.
Read 7 tweets
Oct 11, 2023
Lt. Hugh Clapperton and his men came to Kano in 1824. When he reached Kano at the time, he was disappointed because not an individual turn his head to gaze at him, but the Kanawa were busy with their businesses and allow him to passed without notice or remark. Image
Clapperton reached Kano, a large walled town with a population of 40,000 people. He was impressed by its size and importance as a trading center, with teeming markets selling produce from all over Africa.
Clapperton now found himself not among gaping pagan people but an indifferent, self-sufficient and highly sophisticated people with their civilisation and religion. In Kano, he met travelers from as far away as Constantinople, Jerusalem, and Mecca.
Read 7 tweets
Aug 26, 2023
Hausa architecture from Northern Nigeria, is perhaps one of the least known but most beautiful aspects of Hausa culture. It has been in existence for thousands of years & is characterized by bright, colorful, intricately engraved buildings

A thread on Hausa architecture…

-from @BaytAlFann
#RanarHausa
1/ Hausa architecture is the architecture of the Hausa people of Northern Nigeria. Hausa architectural forms include mosques, walls, houses, public buildings, and gates.

Traditional Hausa Mosque
#RanarHausa Image
2/The Hausa are the largest ethnic group in West and Central Africa made up of a diverse but culturally homogeneous people, predominantly based in the Sahelian and savannah areas of southern Niger and northern Nigeria.
#RanarHausa Image
Read 22 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(